
In 33 days, President-elect Barack Obama will be sworn in as the 44th President of the USA. What does this have to do with mobile? Well, with a ginormous-sized crowd expected to attend Obama’s inauguration, a spokesman for the CTIA warns that cellular phone systems around the National Mall in Washington, DC could be overloaded under such conditions.
According to CNN:
Sprint and Verizon are two wireless carriers in the D.C.-metro area spending millions of dollars to add capacity to their cell sites ahead of Obama’s inauguration.
In an effort to better accommodate the increased network use, Sprint will utilize COWs (Cellular On Wheels) and COLTs (Cellular On Light Trucks), equipment generally reserved for national disasters, to assist with the heavier than normal volume.
Still, there is a major concern that the increased cellular traffic will interfere with critical/emergency communications. However, first responders will be provided with a priority access code enabling them to push their high-priority calls through.
If you were planning to mobi-cast Obama’s speech to friends and family via your cell, I’d suggest you reconsider and bring a video-capable camera to capture the historic event instead. Also, as a general rule of thumb, text messaging may be more effective on an overwhelmed network. Check back for my post-inauguration mobile conditions follow-up, as I will be one of the hundreds of thousands of crazy people in attendance on Jan. 20, 2009.
[via CNN]

The comment above is such a spammy piece of poop, no one will take you seriously if you keep dropping url’s after boring comments….jebus, get it together mang
Just so that people don’t think Adrian is crazy, I thought I’d mention that I deleted the spammy comment.
Expected to overwhelm networks? People are crazy. What’s the big thrill about mobi-casting when you can see it on CNN and probably every other network under the sun.
I don’t doubt that the cell phones will go crazy in DC and other communication. I have a hard enough time in Chicago being two blocks away from him at work right now.
My network card on my computer worked fine until he set up headquarters in the Federal Building. Now the signal is sporadic. I blame it on interference from the cop radios all over the place.
Morgan Mandel